Mmm, haggis. How much haggis can I eat before Burns night?

  • @[email protected]
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    213 hours ago

    American with Scottish ancestors here. I’m happy that traditions will be upheld this way but I’ll pass. There’s other Scottish foods I’ve seen in travel videos that look amazing though. One day I’ll visit.

    • @AlpacaChariot
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      111 hours ago

      It’s one of those things that looks and sounds awful, but if someone gave you it in a roll and you ate some before you knew what it was, you’d probably enjoy it and it would avoid the ick.

      It’s a similar thing to black pudding. A few years ago, I went camping in a group with one mate who I didn’t realise didn’t like black pudding. We wake up by a lake in the most perfect spot, everyone is really hungry, and we cook everything in the same pot so it all ends up mixed in. He had to try it, and it turns out he loves black pudding now :D

    • @[email protected]
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      010 hours ago

      If you eat meat, there’s no real reason not to eat haggis. It’s no more gross than eating steak or chicken when you get down to the nittygritty of it. It’s all animal bits at the end of the day. If you’ve ever eaten hot dogs, then you’ve probably eaten far worse “quality” than is in haggis. You’ll be surprised how delicious it is! Worst case, you don’t like it and don’t have it again, but I’ve yet to meet anyone who didn’t enjoy haggis after opening their mind to trying it.

      And if you don’t eat meat, vegetarian haggis is pretty good too. Not quite The Real McCoy, but not far off.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 hours ago

        I eat plants but it’ll be a cold day in hell before I eat the weird mushy brown part at the end of a ripe banana